[applause] >> let me talk about another jack nelson because i didn't know this jack nelson. [laughter] donahey the problem and the civil-rights movement is that was people who were writing about us or making us the problem and jack never did that. i was just down in albany and just before christmas because it had occurred to me that it was exactly 50 years ago that i was down there and i started driving around and remembering things and quad in "the new york times" wrote to the obituary of martin luther king that non-violence was dead, it was rejected. martin luther king couldn't defeat, and the story really was that the kennedy administration wanted carl sanders to win in 1962 and there was a federal injunction that was placed on martin luther king. so we went up against laureate pritchard in georgia. we had to take on the federal government coming and we chose not to do that and jack always seemed to understand that we were not the problem. fi joost call "the new york times" quite a bit because they were -- well i think that they were being polluted by information that the